Amazon has opened three Greater Boston offices in recent years and plans to open another. It's also acquired a couple of notable startups in the area.

In short, Boston remains part of Amazon's expansion plans, even without HQ2.

Check out Amazon's job board right now, and you'll find about 400 openings for full-time workers in Massachusetts. That's a far cry from the tens of thousands of career opportunities that would have come with a second headquarters, but it's solid evidence of something Boston Mayor Marty Walsh said when Amazon named the city a finalist, back in January.

"In the conversations we’ve had with Amazon about other opportunities, Boston seems to be a place that is really exciting for them and intriguing to them," Walsh said then.

Fully implemented, Amazon's Seaport growth plan would trigger $10 million in tax breaks from the city. Jonathan Greeley, director of development review for the Boston Development and Planning Agency, says the potential economic boost justifies the incentive.

"The benefits, I think, are significant," he said when the agency approved the tax package. "We are incentivizing the construction of a new building. We are adding 2,000 jobs to both the commonwealth and the Boston area. And we’re also excited to continue to encourage and work with Amazon in expanding their presence here in the city of Boston."

In June, Amazon reportedly spent even more — $1 billion — on another Bay State startup, Somerville-based PillPack. It's an online pharmacy that helps people with multiple prescriptions manage their dosing schedules.

Of course, the core of Amazon's Massachusetts business is in high-tech fields such as machine learning. In Kendall Square, Back Bay and Fort Point, the company employs engineers tasked with making the company's virtual assistant, "Alexa," ever smarter.

At a business conference last month, Boston's economic development chief, John Barros, said Amazon's new minimum wage helps make the company an important part of the local economy, regardless of its HQ2 decision.

"Amazon is going to be a partner in Boston, is here already," Barros said. "We continue to have conversations with them and other corporations about how we do smart growth, how they continue to invest in the talent, in the people, in infrastructure."